The German band Eloy's career has always been characterized by their grandiose, spacey progressive rock style, replete with allusions to science fiction and mysticism. However, their debut album bears little resemblance to that musical orientation; in this first release, they focus on the more energetic and heavy sounds of conventional hard rock. Of the lineup that recorded this first album, only three members would continue after its release: Frank Bonermann (guitar), Manfred Wieczorke (guitar and vocals), and Wolfgang Stöcker (bass), while the rest consisted of drummer Helmuth Draht and organist and singer Erich Schriever. Although initially categorized as krautrock, their style was actually closer to the British hard rock of bands like Uriah Heep, Atomic Rooster, or Warhorse than to the German movement full of improvisation, psychedelic sounds, and experimentation. Plausible pieces such as the powerful "Today", the psychedelic "Something Yellow", the dark and heavy "Song Of A Paranoid Soldier", the relaxing "Isle Of Sun" or the hard rock groove "Voice Of Revolution", were part of the worthy debut of one of the most emblematic and famous bands that emerged from Germany during the 1970s.

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